R. v. Brown, [1993] 2 S.C.R.
918
Albert Raymond Roy Brown Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v.
Brown
File No.: 23103.
1993: June 18;
1993: August 12.
Present: La Forest,
L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier and Iacobucci JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for
alberta
Constitutional law ‑‑
Charter of Rights ‑‑ Fundamental justice ‑‑ Right to
remain silent ‑‑ Trial judge admitting into evidence tape recorded
conversations between accused and undercover police officer ‑‑
Accused arguing on appeal that evidence should have been excluded in light of
Supreme Court of Canada decision rendered after trial -- Whether accused's
rights under s. 7 of Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms violated.
The accused was
convicted of first degree murder. The trial judge admitted in evidence tape
recorded conversations between the accused and an undercover police officer.
The accused did not object to the admission of this evidence at trial, but on
appeal argued that the conversations should have been excluded as they were
obtained in violation of his right to remain silent under s. 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms . The Supreme Court of Canada's decision in R.
v. Hebert, in which it was held that a statement elicited from an accused
by an undercover officer violated s. 7 of the Charter , was not released
until shortly after the trial verdict. The Court of Appeal, in a majority
judgment, dismissed the accused's appeal.
Held (L'Heureux‑Dubé J.
dissenting): The appeal should be allowed.
Per La Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and
Iacobucci JJ.: A new trial should be ordered solely on the ground of the
alleged violation of the accused's rights under s. 7 of the Charter .
The Crown and the accused will have the right to lead evidence on the issue of
whether or not the accused knew that his interrogations were being conducted by
police officers such that he waived his right to silence.
Per L'Heureux‑Dubé J.
(dissenting): Courts have long frowned on the practice of raising new
arguments on appeal. Only in those exceptional cases where balancing the
interests of justice to all parties leads to the conclusion that an injustice
has been done should courts permit new grounds to be raised on appeal. Appeals
on questions of law alone are more likely to be received, as ordinarily they do
not require further findings of fact. Three prerequisites must be satisfied in
order to permit the raising of a new issue, including a Charter
challenge, for the first time on appeal: first, there must be a sufficient
evidentiary record to resolve the issue; second, it must not be an instance in
which the accused for tactical reasons failed to raise the issue at trial; and
third, the court must be satisfied that no miscarriage of justice will result.
In this case there has been no change in the substantive offence, the issue was
not raised at trial, with the result that the record necessary for appellate
review of the issue is unavailable, and there has been no denial of justice to
the accused. The Court of Appeal therefore properly concluded that no appeal
on this new issue should be entertained.
Even if the accused
were permitted to raise the issue of a violation of his right to silence, no
violation could be established on the evidence adduced at trial in this case.
Nor would admission of the evidence bring the administration of justice into
disrepute, while its exclusion would do so. The evidence sought to be excluded
was not central to the verdict, and was equivocal. Evidence gathered by the
police in good faith in complete conformity with acceptable investigative
practices as the law stood at the time should not be open to attack after the
trial process is over. Finally, the accused fully waived his right to silence
under s. 7 by signing admissions that the evidence was admissible.
Cases Cited
By L'Heureux‑Dubé J.
(dissenting)
R. v. Hebert, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 151; R. v.
Broyles, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 595; R. v. Thomas, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 713; R.
v. Martineau, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 633; Corporation professionnelle des
médecins du Québec v. Thibault, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 1033; R. v. Wigman,
[1987] 1 S.C.R. 246; Brown v. Dean, [1910] A.C. 373; Perka v. The
Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 232; Brecht v. Abrahamson, 113 S.Ct. 1710
(1993); R. v. Vidulich (1989), 37 B.C.L.R. (2d) 391.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 7 , 24(2) .
APPEAL from a
judgment of the Alberta Court of Appeal (1992), 73 C.C.C. (3d) 481, 127 A.R.
89, 20 W.A.C. 89, affirming the accused's conviction by Holmes J. on a
charge of first degree murder. Appeal allowed, L'Heureux‑Dubé J.
dissenting.
Alexander D.
Pringle, Q.C.,
for the appellant.
Peter Martin, Q.C., for the respondent.
The judgment of La
Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and Iacobucci JJ. was delivered by
//Iacobucci J.//
Iacobucci
J. -- I am of the opinion
that this appeal should be allowed for substantially the reasons given by
Harradence J.A. in the Alberta Court of Appeal (1992), 73 C.C.C. (3d) 481,
solely on the ground of the alleged violation of the appellant's rights under
s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms . Consequently, a
new trial should be ordered with the result that I refrain from commenting further
on the other questions involved in this case. However, in the new trial, the
Crown and the appellant shall have the right to lead evidence going to the
issue of whether or not the appellant knew that his interrogations were being
conducted by police officers such that he waived his right to silence.
The appellant
submitted that the trial judge erred in treating as inculpatory his silence or
noncommittal responses to certain accusatory statements by Joan Brown. I am
satisfied that the trial judge refrained from relying on such evidence in
coming to his conclusion.
I would therefore
allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the Alberta Court of Appeal, set
aside the conviction of first degree murder, and order a new trial.
The following are
the reasons delivered by
//L'Heureux-Dubé J.//
L'Heureux-Dubé
J. (dissenting) -- The
appellant in this case was charged and convicted of first degree murder in
connection with the death of one Kindrachuk. He now seeks to overturn this
conviction on the basis that taped conversations made by an undercover
policeman subsequent to his arrest should have been excluded under
s. 24(2) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms as they
were obtained in violation of his right to silence under s. 7 of the Charter .
At trial, the issue
of the admissibility of this evidence was raised by the trial judge. The
appellant agreed that all of the evidence, which he now impugns, should be
admissible and signed a statement which included the following admissions:
All
statements made by [the appellant] to persons in authority were freely and
voluntarily made and conform with and satisfy the legal rights and obligations
contained in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
.
. .
All
conversations recorded between [the appellant] and Constable Harvey JONES are
accurate recordings of those conversations; were made freely and voluntarily to
an undercover police officer; and satisfy the provisions of S. 184(2)(a) &
(b) of the Criminal Code R.S.C. 1985, Chap. C-46 and Duarte v. The Queen
53 C.C.C. (3d).
The defence at that
time viewed the tapes as largely exculpatory and, as part of its trial
strategy, utilized them as evidence that the accused had not killed the
deceased. The appellant was nonetheless found guilty and sentenced to 25
years' imprisonment.
Shortly after the
trial, this Court released its decision in R. v. Hebert, [1990] 2 S.C.R.
151, in which it was held that a statement elicited from an accused by an
undercover officer after arrest violates the accused's right to silence under
s. 7 of the Charter . On appeal, the appellant argued that the
evidence should have been excluded, despite his initial agreement that it was
admissible. Two grounds were advanced in support. First, the appellant
contended that it did not object to the statements because their admission was
inevitable based on the law as it stood at the time of trial. Second, defence
counsel viewed the statements as exculpatory, as the accused did not admit at
any point in the conversations that he killed Kindrachuk. The Court of Appeal
dismissed the appeal, Harradence J.A. dissenting, (1992), 73 C.C.C. (3d) 481,
on the following grounds. As the issue of the appellant's right to silence had
not been raised at trial, there was no evidentiary foundation to establish the
presence of a Charter violation, specifically that the statement had
been elicited by the undercover officer without the appellant's knowledge. The
decision of the appellant's counsel not to object to the admissibility of the
taped conversations, taken as a matter of strategy, could not be reversed on
appeal. Moreover, the majority of the Court of Appeal per Major J.A.,
now of this Court, held that, unlike the case in Hebert or R. v.
Broyles, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 595, the appellant waived his s. 7 rights
when he signed the statements which included the admissions referred to above.
My colleagues would
order a new trial on the basis of the alleged violation of the appellant's
right to silence under s. 7 of the Charter . For substantially the
reasons given by Major J.A. for the majority at the Court of Appeal, I dissent
from the majority and would dismiss this appeal. In my view, the main question
in this appeal is the extent to which Charter and other arguments which
were not raised at trial may be raised on appeal. I will also address the
following issues in turn: assuming that a new Charter issue may be
entertained on appeal in this case, whether there is a sufficient evidentiary
foundation to establish a violation of the appellant's right to silence under
s. 7 ; if so, whether the evidence should be excluded under s. 24(2)
of the Charter .
New Issues on Appeal
The appellant
argues that he should have the benefit of any change in the law while he is
still "in the system" as long as an evidentiary basis exists upon
which to make the finding. In doing so, he relies on this Court's judgments in R.
v. Broyles, supra, R. v. Thomas, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 713, R.
v. Martineau, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 633, Corporation professionnelle des
médecins du Québec v. Thibault, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 1033, and R. v. Wigman,
[1987] 1 S.C.R. 246, for the proposition that an appellate court may hear a Charter
argument that was not raised on appeal.
Courts have long
frowned on the practice of raising new arguments on appeal. The concerns are
twofold: first, prejudice to the other side caused by the lack of opportunity
to respond and adduce evidence at trial and second, the lack of a sufficient
record upon which to make the findings of fact necessary to properly rule on
the new issue: see Brown v. Dean, [1910] A.C. 373 (H.L.), and Perka
v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 232.
In addition, the
general prohibition against new arguments on appeal supports the overarching
societal interest in the finality of litigation in criminal matters. Were
there to be no limits on the issues that may be raised on appeal, such finality
would become an illusion. Both the Crown and the defence would face
uncertainty, as counsel for both sides, having discovered that the strategy
adopted at trial did not result in the desired or expected verdict, devised new
approaches. Costs would escalate and the resolution of criminal matters could
be spread out over years in the most routine cases. Moreover, society's expectation
that criminal matters will be disposed of fairly and fully at the first
instance and its respect for the administration of justice would be
undermined. Juries would rightfully be uncertain if they were fulfilling an
important societal function or merely wasting their time. For these reasons,
courts have always adhered closely to the rule that such tactics will not be
permitted.
Despite this
general rule, there have been exceptional cases in which courts have
entertained issues on appeal for the first time. There are three possible
scenarios with regard to the raising of new issues on appeal. An appeal on a
new issue may be permitted upon any subsequent change to the procedural or
substantive law; denied, despite the change in the law, except in exceptional
circumstances; or permitted where a law has been declared unconstitutional,
that is to say where there is no longer any legal basis to the conviction.
It is apparent
that, if appeals were allowed on any point of law that is reinterpreted after
trial, the interests in finality and speedy administration of justice would be
seriously eroded. The Crown and also defendants would face the spectre of
potentially endless retrials brought about by subsequent appellate court
rulings on a vast array of procedural issues which may bear on the
constitutionality of criminal trials.
The costs of such
an approach should not be underestimated. As Rehnquist C.J. of the United States
Supreme Court recently observed, although in a different context, in Brecht
v. Abrahamson, 113 S.Ct. 1710 (1993), at p. 1721:
Retrying
defendants whose convictions are set aside also imposes significant
"social costs," including the expenditure of additional time and
resources for all the parties involved, the "erosion of memory" and
"dispersion of witnesses" which accompany the passage of time and
make obtaining convictions on retrial more difficult, and the frustration of "society's
interest in the prompt administration of justice."
Moreover, no
confidence is vested in the administration of justice when the retrial of an
accused is ordered simply on the ground that the police failed to anticipate a
change in the law which affects the conduct of a case. The Crown is prejudiced
by evidence that has been rendered worthless in the case, often with no
opportunity to successfully gather evidence again, with the result that an
accused already found guilty may go free.
Apart from
society's interest in preventing limitless appeals, the jurisprudence of this
Court does not support the argument that new issues may be raised on appeal
wherever there has been an expansion of the Charter rights of the
accused or a change to a potentially relevant procedure. With the exception of
Broyles, all of the cases cited by the appellant are instances in which
the statutory foundation to the conviction had either been struck down or
reinterpreted subsequent to the trial. In other words, the legal underpinning
for the substantive offence itself had been altered or entirely removed by a
ruling prior to the appeal. This is not the case here.
In Broyles,
an accused contested the admission of a statement he made after arrest that had
been monitored and obtained by police during detention, arguing a violation of
his right to silence under s. 7 of the Charter for the first time
on appeal. This Court allowed the appeal. However, it is important to note
that the issue was not, in fact, new; at trial, the admission of the statement
had been challenged unsuccessfully on grounds of voluntariness and the
appellant also argued that a positive duty existed under s. 7 for remand
centre staff to prevent the access of persons to the accused where the purpose
was to allow the police to monitor a conversation. Because the issue had been
canvassed before, although in a slightly different format, a complete record,
including necessary findings of fact, was available to the Court. The present
case does not fall into this category either.
In my view, given
the jurisprudence of our Court, because of the social costs and the potential
to impede the administration of justice, the general rule respecting new issues
on appeal should be respected. Only in the clear instances in which, after balancing
the interests of both parties, it would otherwise be unjust to the accused not
to deal with the issue should courts permit argument on a new issue on appeal.
The principles stated by Lambert J.A. in R. v. Vidulich (1989) 37
B.C.L.R. (2d) 391 (C.A.), at pp. 398-99, properly frame the approach in
such situations:
It
is perfectly proper to raise a supplementary argument on appeal that was not
raised at trial, if the supplementary argument goes to an issue or ground that
was itself raised at trial. But it requires leave of the court before an
altogether new and independent issue or ground can be raised on appeal that was
not raised at trial.
The
decision whether to grant leave is a matter for the discretion of the court.
The exercise of the discretion will be guided by balancing the interests of
justice as they affect all the parties....
An
accused must put forward his defences at trial. If he decides at that time, as
a matter of tactics or for some other reason, not to put forward a defence that
is available, he must abide by that decision. He cannot expect that if he
loses on the defence that he has put forward, he can then raise another defence
on appeal and seek a new trial to lead the evidence on that defence.
The
result is that it is only in those exceptional cases where balancing the
interests of justice to all parties leads to the conclusion that an injustice
has been done, that a new ground is likely to be permitted to be raised on appeal.
Such a new ground is more likely to be permitted where it raises an issue of
law alone than where it requires the leading of evidence either in the appeal
court or at a new trial. [Emphasis added.]
As Lambert J.A.
correctly points out, appeals on questions of law alone are more likely to be
received by the courts, as ordinarily they do not require further findings of
fact. For this reason, appeals on issues not raised at trial will normally be
confined to those which relate to a change in the law of the underlying offence
rather than evidential matters.
In summary, the
following three prerequisites must be satisfied in order to permit the raising
of a new issue, including a Charter challenge, for the first time on
appeal. First, there must be a sufficient evidentiary record to resolve the
issue. Second, it must not be an instance in which the accused for tactical
reasons failed to raise the issue at trial. Third, the court must be satisfied
that no miscarriage of justice will result from the refusal to raise such new
issue on appeal.
In the present
case, none of these conditions are satisfied. There has been no change to the
substantive offence. The issue was not raised at trial, with the consequence
that the record necessary for appellate review of the issue is unavailable. As
I will discuss in more detail below, because of the manner in which the trial
was conducted, there has been no denial of justice to the appellant. In my
view, the Court of Appeal properly concluded that no appeal on this new issue
should be entertained.
Section 7 Right to Silence
The appellant
submits that a sufficient evidentiary foundation presently exists to establish
a breach of s. 7 in this case. Even if the accused were to be permitted
to now raise the issue of a violation of his right to silence under s. 7 ,
which I have concluded he may not, in my opinion, no violation could be
established on the evidence adduced at trial in this case.
As this Court held
in Hebert, supra, at p. 186:
The
essence of the right to silence is that the suspect be given a choice; the
right is quite simply the freedom to choose -- the freedom to speak to the
authorities on the one hand, and the freedom to refuse to make a statement to
them on the other.
The right to silence does not preclude
an accused from deciding to speak to the police. Therefore, in order for the
appellant's right to silence to have been violated, there must be a finding
that the statement must have been elicited from him unwillingly in the face of
his asserted desire to remain silent.
In this case, the
question crucial to this determination remains unanswered: whether the
appellant knew, at the point when the officer engaged him in conversation about
the events on the night that the deceased disappeared, that the statement was
being given to a police officer. If the appellant was aware at that time that
his cellmate was a police officer and chose to make the largely exculpatory
statements he made for purposes such as "seeding" a defence, there
was no violation of his right to silence.
The evidence
suggests that this scenario is in fact a live possibility in this case. In an
intercepted conversation to his ex-wife 10 days after his arrest, the appellant
disclosed that he became aware at some unknown point that he was being housed
in the cellblock with an undercover police officer. In the statement to the
officer, he admitted that he met with the deceased for the purposes of
transacting a drug deal but denied knowing anything about the killing.
However, the officer testified that, in his opinion, the accused knew very
little, if anything, about cocaine. Moreover, he had previously told his
ex-wife that he had been at the garage all night repairing a car. This
suggests, as the trial judge found, that there was no air of reality to the
appellant's claim that he was involved in a drug transfer at the time.
It must not be
forgotten that an accused may waive his right to silence. The precise
situation which has occurred in this case was in fact envisioned in Hebert,
supra. McLachlin J. held at p. 188:
I
would not wish to rule out the possibility that there may be circumstances in
which a statement might be received where the suspect has not been accorded a
full choice in the sense of having decided, after full observance of all
rights, to make a statement voluntarily.
The appellant
argues that the validity of his waiver was qualified or removed because he was
unaware of the scope of the right to silence that is presently recognized under
s. 7 and hence was not aware of the consequences of waiving the right.
However, for the reasons I have outlined above regarding the litigation of new Charter
issues on appeal, if there is to be any degree of finality and certainty in the
adjudication of criminal matters, "awareness of consequences" cannot
be construed as the awareness of any potential or future changes to the law.
As the respondent points out, such an interpretation would render all such
admissions useless and inherently untrustworthy for both the Crown and the
defence.
In my view, this
requirement must be given its natural meaning, which is that the accused both
has an appreciation of the nature of the evidence he is giving and is aware
that it may be used against him. There is no question, based on his signed
admission that the statements were given voluntarily and in conformity with the
Charter , that these conditions are met in this case and that the
appellant was aware of the consequences of his actions.
Had the appellant
been genuinely concerned about prejudice caused by the admission of the
statement, other avenues of attack under the Charter were available.
Moreover, the Crown would have been on notice that it should adduce evidence to
counter this argument. I agree with the Court of Appeal that the decision not
to raise the issue was a deliberate choice taken as a matter of strategy and
judged to be in the interests of the appellant at the time which may not now be
reversed.
Section 24(2)
As is clear on the
wording of the section, the exclusion of evidence under s. 24(2) is not
automatic upon finding that it was obtained in violation of a Charter
right. Evidence is only excluded when it is established that, "having
regard to all the circumstances, the admission of it in the proceedings would
bring the administration of justice into disrepute".
The following
factors clearly indicate that there has been no unfairness to the parties in
this case. Even if the evidence were to have been obtained in violation of the
appellant's right to silence under s. 7 , in my view, not only does its
admission fail to bring the administration of justice into disrepute, but its
exclusion would do so.
First, the evidence
sought to be excluded was not central to the verdict; moreover, it was
equivocal, and as the appellant's strategy at trial demonstrates, is capable of
exculpating as well as inculpating the appellant. As the trial judge noted:
...
to be fair, in all the accused's conversations with the police upon his arrest
and later in the cells with undercover agent Jones, the accused never admitted
killing Mr. Kindrachuk. In fact, he consistently denied doing so over and
over, notwithstanding considerable psychological pressure was put on him by the
investigating authorities to confess; nor did he ever make a direct admission
to any other person, including his wife. In other words, there is no direct
evidence that the accused killed Mr. Kindrachuk.
While the taped conversations
confirmed the fact that the appellant was with the deceased the night he
disappeared, there was independent evidence of that fact. In coming to his
verdict, the trial judge clearly could not have relied heavily, if at all, on
this evidence to establish that the appellant was the murderer of Kindrachuk.
Rather, as his reasons reveal, the trial judge convicted the appellant on the
totality of the evidence, including substantial circumstantial evidence of
motive, previous schemes which demonstrated intent, inculpatory conversations
to his then wife shortly after the event which he found tantamount to
admissions of guilt, and the appellant's affinity for guns.
Second, the police
acted in good faith in complete conformity with acceptable investigative
practices as the law stood at the time. As I have discussed above, evidence
gathered in this manner which has served to ground a conviction should not be
open to attack after the trial process is concluded.
Third, not only did
the appellant fail to raise the issue of a breach of s. 7 at trial, he
went so far as to make a positive statement that he fully waived his right to
silence under s. 7 by signing admissions to that effect. In view of these
admissions, I cannot accept the argument that the admission of this evidence
now brings the administration of justice into disrepute.
For these reasons,
I would dismiss the appeal.
Appeal allowed, L'Heureux‑Dubé J.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Pringle, Renouf & Associates, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the
respondent: The Attorney General for Alberta, Edmonton.